Create account Log in

His Folkways Years, 1963-1968

[Edit]

Download links and information about His Folkways Years, 1963-1968 by Dock Boggs. This album was released in 1998 and it belongs to Blues, World Music, Country, Songwriter/Lyricist, Contemporary Folk genres. It contains 50 tracks with total duration of 02:23:11 minutes.

Artist: Dock Boggs
Release date: 1998
Genre: Blues, World Music, Country, Songwriter/Lyricist, Contemporary Folk
Tracks: 50
Duration: 02:23:11
Buy on iTunes $19.99
Buy on Amazon $8.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Down South Blues 2:11
2. Country Blues 3:52
3. Pretty Polly 2:55
4. Coal Creek March 1:56
5. My Old Horse Died 1:47
6. Wild Bill Jones 2:11
7. Rowan County Crew 6:10
8. New Prisoner's Song 2:55
9. Oh, Death 3:20
10. Prodigal Son 3:54
11. Mother's Advice 3:42
12. Drunkard's Lone Child 4:08
13. Bright Sunny South 3:39
14. Mistreated Mama Blues 1:53
15. Harvey Logan 3:28
16. Mixed Blues 3:53
17. Old Joe's Barroom 2:50
18. Danville Girl 2:37
19. Cole Younger 1:52
20. Schottische Time 1:15
21. Papa, Build Me a Boat 2:44
22. Little Black Train 2:55
23. No Disappointment In Heaven 2:31
24. Glory Land 4:01
25. Banjo Clog 1:50
26. Wise County Jail 1:52
27. Sugar Baby 2:53
28. The Death of Jerry Damron 4:17
29. Railroad Tramp 3:14
30. Poor Boy In Jail 2:58
31. Brother Jim Got Shot 2:00
32. John Henry 3:31
33. Davenport 1:45
34. Dying Ranger 3:29
35. Little Omie Wise 3:27
36. Sugar Blues 1:26
37. Loving Nancy 2:30
38. Cuba 1:30
39. John Hardy 2:06
40. Peggy Walker 2:56
41. I Hope I Live a Few More Days 4:11
42. Turkey In the Straw 0:51
43. Calvary 3:34
44. Roses While I'm Living 3:25
45. Leave It There 3:24
46. Prayer of a Miner's Child 3:21
47. Coke Oven March 1:04
48. Ruben's Train 2:23
49. Cumberland Gap 2:30
50. Careless Love 4:05

Details

[Edit]

After Boggs, the Appalachian singer/banjoist who had released a dozen sides in the late '20s, was rediscovered by Mike Seeger in 1963, he did some recording for Folkways Records. This double-CD, 50-song set contains the material from three Boggs LPs for Folkways: Legendary Singer & Banjo Player (1963), Vol. 2 (1965), and Vol. 3 (1970). The unearthly qualities of his '20s recordings that caused critics such as Greil Marcus to get wet were not in such exotic force on these later efforts; Boggs had only recently started playing music again after a gap of about 30 years. He's in fairly good form on this extensive compilation, dominated by old folk and blues tunes (some traditional, some learned from mundane sources such as commercial records and a Banker's Life Insurance ad). His singing and banjo playing are the definition of "stark," an overused adjective when applied to traditional Appalachian music. He's much easier to take than even starker proponents such as Roscoe Holcomb, however, with vocals that are effectively plaintive and rough-hewn without sounding unduly pinched, although they sometimes crack and strain. His best tunes are the ones with a spooky undercurrent, like "Danville Girl," which shares the same melody as the famous standard "St. James Infirmary," and "Oh Death." The reissue has excellent, lengthy historical liner notes from Barry O'Connell and fascinating recollections of Boggs' rediscovery by Mike Seeger.